[quote name='unkamunka' post='767303' date='25-Mar-2009 10:30']Is there a special code enterable in the Find box to search for instances where words are entirely in Upper Case?[/quote]
I think you might need to do a wildcard search. The following pattern finds capitalized words between certain boundary characters, but it's not very convenient to have the boundary characters selected:

This will find any number of capital letters that don't have a lower case letter before or after them.
If you wan't to avoid matches for single letter words like I, or A at the beginning of a sentence, then you could use

[quote name='unkamunka' post='767303' date='25-Mar-2009 13:30']Is there a special code enterable in the Find box to search for instances where words are entirely in Upper Case?[/quote]
I take it that you wish to find all words that are uppercase, since you have disregarded the 'Match Case' option.

[quote name='wdwells' post='767342' date='25-Mar-2009 20:15']Can you point me to some explanatory data?[/quote]

In a wildcard search you can put a sequence in [ ] brackets to match any term. this is commonly used with things like [0-9] or [A-Z] but it will work with any sequence.

Since the ASCII character set is ordered with 0-9 followed by A-Z followed by a-z, the sequence [0-z] matches any number or letter. The ! character says NOT, so [!0-z] means any character that is not a number or letter.

[A-Z] matches any upper case character, and @ means 1 or more of the preceding character. So [A-Z]@ means 1 or more upper case characters.

If we put another [A-Z] in front of [A-Z]@ then this gives [A-Z][A-Z]@ which means two or more consecutive upper case letters.

This is then bracketed with the [!0-z] to give the whole expression which can be read as
"Something that is not a number or letter, followed by two or more upper case letters, followed by something that is not a number or letter"

[quote name='StuartR' post='767322' date='25-Mar-2009 15:05']I think this could be improved a bit by changing A-z into 0-Z, like this

Code:

[!0-z][A-Z][A-Z]@[!0-z]

this will avoid matching strings like AB29[/quote]
Hi again Stuart
I have obviously missed something basic here. Can you tell me where I've gone wrong. I'm using Word 2003 SP3
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